What good is shiny metal in a collapse? If shit's really going to hit the fan wouldn't it be better to stockpile practical items like toilet paper, munitions, and non-perishable foods?
Also is this all theory or is it certain? I'm just skeptical because it seems like we hear these doomsday theories about our market every two years, this is of course the first time I've heard it here though, so I'm giving it a little more concern. Is this all confirmed by Satan and/or demon's or is this just our speculation about what the planets are saying? I only ask because I've heard astrology isn't 100% accurate but this would be important for me if it happened. I mean, my families white collar so we don't really have any skills that would be useful in a bad situation like this. I took a shop class that taught me how to weld but that was a while ago, and I'm far from a master at it anyway.
I'm going to college in just a few days and getting a major in finance for god's sake so I would be seriously useless in a situation like this. Except for being an able bodied man of course.
On Sunday, August 10, 2014 8:54 AM, "denniswhicher@... [JoyofSatan666]" <
[email protected] wrote:
There is the chance that they will confiscate things--that is, whatever they can confiscate with a mouse click. Fall for that MyRA shit, and that is as good as gone with a mouse click. Your bank accounts could be wiped out or decimated with bail-ins and bank holidays. That is the biggest risk.
Now, as for whether they will go after hard assets, the EPA is already dispossessing people from land. You need to pay taxes, you need to follow regulations that have nothing to do with protecting the environment, and they can go in and destroy whatever doesn't fit those regulations. Silver, on the other hand, is pretty difficult to confiscate. And pointless.
Why? Why did they confiscate the gold in 1933? Because that was where the wealth was. Almost everyone had at least a few gold coins. But there were no SWAT teams to enforce it. Compare to today--where is the wealth today? In toilet paper denominated assets. MyRA's are my pick of assets (I would even question whether those kike instruments are assets) to be confiscated, with a mouse click. Many have CDs and mutual funds denominated in toilet papers. Just go after those, possibly with bail-ins, and that will strip most people of wealth.
Are they going to confiscate silver? They already are. Each time they smash down the price, they are getting stupid idiots to panic sell their silver, at low prices. That is how they are confiscating silver. Once they got as much as they reasonably think they are getting, the price will go beyond reach of virtually everyone. Not a single shot fired. Not a single cop sent into houses to seize anything. People are willingly surrendering their silver each time the price crashes, and they are afraid of getting it back because of another price smack down.
I believe that will work to the extent where enforced confiscation of silver will not be cost effective. Most of those with IQs below the kike average will fall for the confiscation that is in place now (price crashes). A few with IQs above the kike average will buy some more each time they try confiscating it with a price crash, since a bargain at 36 toilet papers is a steal at 18. And, many of those who simply buy some more are more likely than average to have another metal at their disposal: Lead.
Regular burglars might try to steal your stash--that is, until they are unlucky to find the one that has stacks of bullets and guns in addition to stacks of silver and gold. Sooner or later, someone is going to shoot them, put gray energy on them, sic their dog on them, or do something else to put them in their places. I think those burglars will be after food and drink--or cigarettes and drugs. I doubt many of them have IQs high enough to do them any good.
What you might have to worry about is someone trying to pass fake gold or silver as real. Tungsten plated with gold and mislabeled solid gold is a threat, as is molybdenum plated with silver. The molecular weight is similar enough that weighing your gold-plated tungsten bar will come up close. Most of those doing that are not smart enough to realize that molybdenum is not nearly as conductive as silver, and tungsten also has higher electrical resistance than gold. This is why equipment that can test electrical resistance, along with knowledge of what it is supposed to be, is essential before trading in gold and silver, especially large bars.